Vegetation management and water yield in a southwestern ponderosa pine watershed: An evaluation of three hydrologic simulation models

Three hydrologic simulation models of different resolutions were evaluated to determine model response to predicting runoff under changing vegetation cover. Two empirically-based regression models (Baker-Kovner Streamflow Regression Model and ECOSIM) and one multiple component water balance model (Y...

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Main Author: Jeton, Anne Elizabeth, 1956-
Other Authors: Guertin, D. Phillip
Language:en_US
Published: The University of Arizona. 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/277298
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2772982015-10-23T05:03:14Z Vegetation management and water yield in a southwestern ponderosa pine watershed: An evaluation of three hydrologic simulation models Jeton, Anne Elizabeth, 1956- Guertin, D. Phillip Hydrology. Environmental Sciences. Three hydrologic simulation models of different resolutions were evaluated to determine model response to predicting runoff under changing vegetation cover. Two empirically-based regression models (Baker-Kovner Streamflow Regression Model and ECOSIM) and one multiple component water balance model (Yield) were modified, using FORTRAN 77 and calibrated on a southwestern ponderosa pine ecosystem. Statistical analysis indicate no significant difference between the Baker-Kovner and Yield models, while ECOSIM consistently under predicts by as much as 50 percent from the observed runoff. This is mainly attributed to a sensitivity to the insolation factor. Yield is the best predictor for moderate and high flows, to within 10 and 20 percent respectively. Of the four watershed treatments, the light overstory thinning on Watershed 8 yielded the best response for all three models. This is in contrast to the strip-cut treatment on Watershed 14 which consistently over-predicted, in large part due an inaccurate estimation of snowpack evaporation on the exposed, south-facing strip-cuts. Runoff responses are highly influenced by the precipitation regime, soil and topographic characteristics of a watershed as well as by a reduction in evapotranspiration losses from changes in vegetation cover. 1990 text Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) http://hdl.handle.net/10150/277298 1340288 .b26251929 en_US Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Hydrology.
Environmental Sciences.
spellingShingle Hydrology.
Environmental Sciences.
Jeton, Anne Elizabeth, 1956-
Vegetation management and water yield in a southwestern ponderosa pine watershed: An evaluation of three hydrologic simulation models
description Three hydrologic simulation models of different resolutions were evaluated to determine model response to predicting runoff under changing vegetation cover. Two empirically-based regression models (Baker-Kovner Streamflow Regression Model and ECOSIM) and one multiple component water balance model (Yield) were modified, using FORTRAN 77 and calibrated on a southwestern ponderosa pine ecosystem. Statistical analysis indicate no significant difference between the Baker-Kovner and Yield models, while ECOSIM consistently under predicts by as much as 50 percent from the observed runoff. This is mainly attributed to a sensitivity to the insolation factor. Yield is the best predictor for moderate and high flows, to within 10 and 20 percent respectively. Of the four watershed treatments, the light overstory thinning on Watershed 8 yielded the best response for all three models. This is in contrast to the strip-cut treatment on Watershed 14 which consistently over-predicted, in large part due an inaccurate estimation of snowpack evaporation on the exposed, south-facing strip-cuts. Runoff responses are highly influenced by the precipitation regime, soil and topographic characteristics of a watershed as well as by a reduction in evapotranspiration losses from changes in vegetation cover.
author2 Guertin, D. Phillip
author_facet Guertin, D. Phillip
Jeton, Anne Elizabeth, 1956-
author Jeton, Anne Elizabeth, 1956-
author_sort Jeton, Anne Elizabeth, 1956-
title Vegetation management and water yield in a southwestern ponderosa pine watershed: An evaluation of three hydrologic simulation models
title_short Vegetation management and water yield in a southwestern ponderosa pine watershed: An evaluation of three hydrologic simulation models
title_full Vegetation management and water yield in a southwestern ponderosa pine watershed: An evaluation of three hydrologic simulation models
title_fullStr Vegetation management and water yield in a southwestern ponderosa pine watershed: An evaluation of three hydrologic simulation models
title_full_unstemmed Vegetation management and water yield in a southwestern ponderosa pine watershed: An evaluation of three hydrologic simulation models
title_sort vegetation management and water yield in a southwestern ponderosa pine watershed: an evaluation of three hydrologic simulation models
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1990
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/277298
work_keys_str_mv AT jetonanneelizabeth1956 vegetationmanagementandwateryieldinasouthwesternponderosapinewatershedanevaluationofthreehydrologicsimulationmodels
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